Reconstruction techniques and associated morbidity in minimally invasive gastrectomy for cancer - insights from the GastroBenchmark and GASTRODATA databases.
Author
Schneider, Marcel AndréKim, Jeesun
Berlth, Felix
Sugita, Yutaka
Grimminger, Peter P
Wijnhoven, Bas P L
Overtoom, Hidde
Gockel, Ines
Thieme, René
Griffiths, Ewen A
Butterworth, William
Nienhüser, Henrik
Müller, Beat
Crnovrsanin, Nerma
Gero, Daniel
Nickel, Felix
Gisbertz, Suzanne
van Berge Henegouwen, Mark I
Pucher, Philip H
Khan, Kashuf
Chaudry, Asif
Patel, Pranav H
Pera, Manuel
Dal Cero, Mariagiulia
Garcia, Carlos
Martinez Salinas, Guillermo
Kassab, Paulo
Prado Castro, Osvaldo Antônio
Norero, Enrique
Wisniowski, Paul
Putnam, Luke Randall
Lombardi, Pietro Maria
Ferrari, Giovanni
Gudaityte, Rita
Maleckas, Almantas
Prodehl, Leanne
Castaldi, Antonio
Prudhomme, Michel
Lee, Hyuk-Joon
Sano, Takeshi
Baiocchi, Gian Luca
de Manzoni, Giovanni
Giacopuzzi, Simone
Bencivenga, Maria
Rosati, Riccardo
Puccetti, Francesco
D'Ugo, Domenico
Nunobe, Souya
Yang, Han-Kwang
Gutschow, Christian Alexander
Publication date
2024-08-05Subject
Oncology. Pathology.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Objective/background: Various anastomotic and reconstruction techniques are used for minimally invasive total (miTG) and distal gastrectomy (miDG). Their effects on postoperative morbidity have not been extensively studied. Methods: MiTG and miDG patients were selected from 9356 oncological gastrectomies performed 2017-2021 in 44 centers. Endpoints included anastomotic leakage (AL) rate and postoperative morbidity tested by multivariable analysis. Results: Three major anastomotic techniques (circular stapled (CS); linear stapled (LS); hand sewn (HS)), and three major bowel reconstruction types (Roux (RX); Billroth I (BI); Billroth II (BII)) were identified in miTG (n=878) and miDG (n=3334). Postoperative complications including AL (5.2% vs. 1.1%), overall (28.7% vs. 16.3%) and major morbidity (15.7% vs. 8.2%), as well as 90-day mortality (1.6% vs. 0.5%) were higher after miTG compared with miDG. After miTG, AL rate was higher after CS (4.3%) and HS (7.9%) compared with LS (3.4%). Similarly, major complications (LS: 9.7%, CS: 16.2%, HS: 12.7%) were lowest after LS. Multivariate analysis confirmed anastomotic technique as predictive factor for AL, overall and major complications. In miDG, AL rate (BI: 1.4%, BII 0.8%, RX 1.2%), overall (BI: 14.5%, BII: 15.0%, RX: 18.7%,) and major morbidity (BI: 7.9%, BII: 9.1%, RX: 7.2%), and mortality (BI: 0%, BII: 0.1%, RY: 1.1%%) were not affected by bowel reconstruction. Conclusion: In oncologically suitable situations, miDG should be preferred to miTG, as postoperative morbidity is significantly lower. LS should be a preferred anastomotic technique for miTG in Western Centers. Conversely, bowel reconstruction in DG may be chosen according to surgeon's preference.Citation
Schneider MA, Kim J, Berlth F, Sugita Y, Grimminger PP, Wijnhoven BPL, Overtoom H, Gockel I, Thieme R, Griffiths EA, Butterworth W, Nienhüser H, Müller B, Crnovrsanin N, Gero D, Nickel F, Gisbertz S, van Berge Henegouwen MI, Pucher PH, Khan K, Chaudry A, Patel PH, Pera M, Dal Cero M, Garcia C, Martinez Salinas G, Kassab P, Prado Castro OA, Norero E, Wisniowski P, Putnam LR, Lombardi PM, Ferrari G, Gudaityte R, Maleckas A, Prodehl L, Castaldi A, Prudhomme M, Lee HJ, Sano T, Baiocchi GL, De Manzoni G, Giacopuzzi S, Bencivenga M, Rosati R, Puccetti F, D'Ugo D, Nunobe S, Yang HK, Gutschow CA; GASTRODATA consortium. Reconstruction Techniques and Associated Morbidity in Minimally Invasive Gastrectomy for Cancer: Insights From the GastroBenchmark and GASTRODATA databases. Ann Surg. 2024 Nov 1;280(5):788-798. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000006470. Epub 2024 Aug 5.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/journals/230/PMID
39101212Journal
Annals of SurgeryPublisher
Lippincott Williams & Wilkinsae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1097/SLA.0000000000006470